By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information May 27, 2025 Part I – Unmasking the Messenger, Deconstructing the Narrative Eileen Ng has carved out a career writing from the corridors of colonial continuity—first in Malaysia, then in Singapore, now under the polished byline of a transnational news syndicate: the Associated Press. She is not a lone... Continue Reading →
Redlines: May 27, 2025
Redlines: May 27, 2025 Daily revolutionary dispatches from the frontlines of global class war, settler empire, and technofascist recalibration. Africa World Bank Slashes Kenya's Growth Forecast Amid Neoliberal Chokehold The World Bank has cut Kenya’s 2025 growth projection from 5.2% to 4.5%, blaming “private sector constraints”—a euphemism for the strangling effects of debt, austerity, and... Continue Reading →
Lines in the Soil, Fire in the Sky: Vietnam, Korea, and the Empire’s Broken Map
Korea was carved. Vietnam refused. Two revolutions, two outcomes—both exposing the fragility of U.S. empire and the enduring power of people’s war. This is the story of partition as counterrevolution, of counterinsurgency as colonial relapse, and of liberation carved not in treaties but in blood and resolve. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information May 26,... Continue Reading →
Red Autumn: The Korean War and the Highest Form of Proletarian Internationalism
This is not the story of a Cold War chess match or a border conflict spun out of control. This is the story of a revolutionary people defending their land and their future against the most brutal empire in human history—and winning. Korea did not collapse. It stood, with the full force of China and... Continue Reading →
Niger Didn’t Expel China—It Recalibrated the Terms of Struggle
Western media calls it instability. We call it sovereignty. Behind the headlines about “expulsions” lies a deeper truth: Niger is not turning away from China—it’s turning toward itself. This Isn’t a “Breakup”—It’s a Recalibration Toward Sovereignty By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information May 26, 2025 Part I – When Sovereignty Speaks, Empire Sends In the... Continue Reading →
Redlines: May 22, 2025
Redlines: May 22, 2025 Daily revolutionary dispatches from the frontlines of global class war, settler empire, and technofascist recalibration. Africa Premier state Senegal to boot all foreign troops Senegal’s Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko announced the full expulsion of foreign military forces—namely the French—by July, closing the curtain on a 2012 defense agreement that symbolized the... Continue Reading →
Redlines: May 16, 2025
Africa Red Cross Transfers Congolese Troops as M23 War Intensifies Over 1,300 disarmed Congolese soldiers and police were transferred from rebel-held Goma to Kinshasa in a Red Cross–brokered deal involving the UN, the Congolese state, and Rwanda-backed M23 rebels. But this isn’t demobilization—it’s imperial logistics in motion. M23 is a proxy force enabling neocolonial access... Continue Reading →
Ethiopia Breaks the Spell: Mining Sovereignty in the Age of Empire
How $1.6 Billion in Chinese Mineral Deals Mark a Revolt Against IMF Rule By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | May 15, 2025 I. Behind the Headlines: Who Writes the Script for Empire? By Weaponized Information | May 2025 Let’s not get it twisted—Tsvetana Paraskova didn’t stumble upon Ethiopia’s new mineral deals while wandering through... Continue Reading →
Redlines: May 15, 2025
Daily Dispatches from the Frontlines of Global Class and Anti-Imperialist Struggle By Weaponized Information | May 15, 2025 Africa Niger Tells France: Get Your Hands Off Our Uranium For decades, France lit its cities with uranium ripped from Niger’s earth, while Nigeriens stayed in the dark—literally and politically. Now the government in Niamey has pulled... Continue Reading →
Redlines: May 14, 2025
Daily Dispatches from the Frontlines of Global Class and Anti-Imperialist Struggle By Weaponized Information | May 14, 2025 Africa France and Algeria Clash as the Ghosts of Empire Roam France expelled Algerian diplomats in a colonial tantrum masked as diplomacy. The spark was a dispute over diplomatic procedure—but the real trigger was Algeria’s rejection of... Continue Reading →